In this Monday, Oct. 7, 2013 photo, a gilt-brass and enamel clock-watch with alarm and calendar made by Gaultier Ferlite is seen on display in an exhibition 'The Cheapside Hoard: London's Lost Jewels' ...
For the first time since it was found more than a century ago, the entire glittering Cheapside Hoard has gone on display at the Museum of London – together with the skulduggery, forgery, fraud and ...
The new Museum of London exhibition is dedicated to the Cheapside Hoard, which includes nearly 500 gems including emeralds from Colombia, diamonds from India and pearls from Bahrain Selection of items ...
The true story of the Cheapside Hoard is the stuff of fairy tales. But there are reasons why this unique collection of 16th- and 17th-century jewellery has never before been displayed in its entirety.
Just over a century after the “world’s most important” hoard of Elizabethan jewellery was discovered by chance in a cellar in London, experts have uncovered important information that may lead to ...
A giant sleeping whippet and a bright red sundial are among the playful street furniture enlivening the UK capital during the London Festival of Architecture. Scattered throughout London's Cheapside ...
This is a sponsored article on behalf of the Museum of London. Jewellery lovers, London history fans and magpies listen up closely. If you’re a fan of all things shiny then make sure you don’t miss ...
It's the stuff daydreams are made of: Finding unexpected treasure in an unexpected place, as happened to some London construction workers who stumbled on one of the most spectacular treasures ever, ...
LONDON (Reuters) - Experts may be one tiny step closer to unravelling the mystery of who buried hundreds of dazzling jewels under a London neighbourhood during a turbulent period in English history ...
A collection of Elizabethan and Jacobean jewellery goes on display in its entirety for the first time in more than 100 years. The treasure trove was discovered in a London cellar by a group of workmen ...
A new exhibition at the Museum of London contains nearly 500 late 16th and early 17th Century jewels and gemstones. Image caption, The jewels were discovered in 1912 buried in a cellar on London’s ...